Charlotte Perriand

Cutting free of conventional aesthetics during years of work with Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret, Charlotte Perriand turned to working with wood. Four years spent in Japan were crucial to her maturation, but it was after the War that she developed her personal conception of housing to the full, endowing her creations with a human dimension and achieving a synthesis of the traditional and the industrial.

  • Charlotte Perriand, Free shape table, 1957
    #1 Free shape table, 1957
  • Charlotte Perriand Free shape low table, ca. 1953
    #2 Free shape low table, ca. 1953
  • Charlotte Perriand Table, 1935
    #3 Table, 1935
    (Charlotte Perriand, Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret)
  • Charlotte Perriand Cabinet, 1950
    #4 Cabinet, ca. 1950
  • Charlotte Perriand Wardrobe, 1956-59
    #5 Wardrobe, 1956-59
    (Charlotte Perriand & Le Corbusier)
  • Charlotte Perriand Wardrobe, 1956-59
    #6 Wardrobe, 1956-59
    (Charlotte Perriand & Le Corbusier)
  • Charlotte Perriand single bed, 1956-59
    #7 Single bed, 1956-59
  • Charlotte Perriand Bench, 1958
    #8 Bench, 1958
  • Charlotte Perriand, console, 1958
    #9 Console, 1958
  • Charlotte Perriand Table, 1956-59
    #10 Table, 1956-59
  • Charlotte Perriand Rack with 3 plastic drawers, ca. 1955
    #11 Rack with 3 plastic drawers, ca. 1955